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15 posts tagged authors
Wattpad is very pleased to bring you today’s guest post from author Margaret Atwood. Ms. Atwood has recently embarked on a new adventure in online publishing and we’re happy to see her dive in! We are also incredibly happy that she has been generous enough to share some advice and insight with the Wattpad community on the process of selecting a title and cover for her latest original short story.
Choosing a book title is sometimes a dream, though more often it’s a nightmare. The title is like a doorway: it’s the first thing a reader sees in addition to and the cover image. Whoever decides on the title of a book hopes that it will invite the reader to open the door and go in.
Sometimes a writer has the title very early, and knows it, and the publisher’s enthusiastic. But if there’s uncertainty, the process of deciding can be nerve-racking, because not everyone involved – the publishers, the marketers, the editors — will agree.
While I was writing I’m Starved For You, I called it Consilience, which is the name of the town where the story takes place. This word has a comfortable, friendly feel to it, though what it actually means, according to Wikipedia, is “a ‘jumping’ together of knowledge by the linking of facts and fact-based theory across disciplines to create a common groundwork of explanation.” This kind of fits what’s going on in the town of Consilience, where the justice system and the economic system are linked by turning a prison into a full-employment scheme, with cost savings and other benefits. These include house-sharing by its citizens, who take turns being prisoners.
But who knows what “consilience” means, right off the bat? So I changed the name to Lockers. This seemed fitting as well, since each of the four characters who share a house has a locker in which to stow the clothes they won’t be wearing during the months they spend in the prison. The lockers are different colors: red, green, purple, pink. Stan’s wife, Charmaine, has the pink one; she briefly considers putting Stan into it, though she realizes she would have to cut some pieces off him in order to cram him in. As a title, Lockers also dovetailed with the prison theme, for prison is a place where people are locked away.
But the editors at Byliner felt that title didn’t jump off the page. They wanted something “sexier,” more alluring; something that would evoke all the longing in the story. We all cudgeled our brains, sending titles back and forth by email – Shackle Day, The Red Locker, Purple Kiss, The Heart Goes Last, I’m Starved For You. Finally we narrowed it down to the last two. Then we voted, and I’m Starved For You won by a narrow margin.
It’s a line from a note Stan finds hidden in the house that he and Charmaine share with their “alternate” couple, whom they are never allowed to see. The note appears to be from the wife, Jasmine, and is addressed to her husband Max. It’s sealed with a purple lipstick kiss. At the beginning of the story, Stan falls in lust with the imprint of this kiss, and determines to track down the woman who has made it.
Once the title was decided on, it was the turn of the cover image.
There was a brief flirtation with a picture of a red scooter on a deserted beach – the mood was “escape” – but as there was no beach in the book, I wrote to my editor, “Never promise a beach when you don’t have one to offer.” It didn’t take us long to decide on the final image, which was the purple lipstick kiss itself, on a folded and slightly crumpled piece of paper. It fit the title – the final title – because an open mouth can be sexy, or it can be hungry. As for the dark pink color, it can be seen as provocative or maybe a little vampiristic. “Starved” implies desperation, and viewed from a certain angle the vertical creases in the paper slightly resemble fangs.
A title and a cover image are indeed like a doorway; and doors are gateways to the unknown. I suppose that’s one of the reasons we read: to follow mysterious pathways; to be taken somewhere we’ve never been before. It might be a little dark in there, but that’s always the chance you take, with doors.
Margaret Atwood is the author of over forty books, including The Handmaid’s Tale and Oryx and Crake. I’m Starved for You can be found at www.Byliner.com/originals/i-m-starved-for-you. Read an excerpt here.
Every Friday, we bring you an undiscovered gem to read on Wattpad. This week, our secret Wattpad Talent Hunters recommend Secrets of Successful Writers, a non-fiction:
Secrets of Successful Writers by Darell Pitt
Interviews with fifty writers as they speak about writing, publishing and promoting their books in the digital age. Some of the writers are traditional authors. Others have built careers as self-published ebook authors. It contains interviews with authors who write detective stories, westerns, romance, thrillers and children’s books.
Included are: John Locke, Micaela Wendell, Dolores Durando, and Robert J. Randisi.
Reading and Writing: Favorite Quotes
(via twilightdew)

Many of the most famous authors in American history had a few pretty weird day jobs to pay the bills before they hit the big time:
Robert Frost worked as a newspaper boy
Jack London was an ‘oyster pirate,’ stealing oysters from the beds of large farmers and selling them at the Oakland markets
Steven King was a janitor in a high school
James Joyce made money singing for his supper
Tom McCarthy was a nude model at an art school in Prague
In this special Banned Books Week podcast, we ask Wattpad writers what they think of banning or censoring books.
Listen to our interviews with:
Plus, we included the audio version of Manifesto (Wattcode 2248289), a poem by New York Times bestselling author Ellen Hopkins!
Watch this mash-up video of famous authors talking about being banned or censored, featuring Bette Greene (Summer of My German Soldier), Jean Craighead George (Julie of the Wolves), Terry Southern’s son Nile (Candy), Pat Conroy, and more!
A list of strange shows in classic novels, assembled in honor of The Night Circus.
1. The Magic Theatre (Steppenwolfe, by Herman Hesse). For madmen only, the price of admission is your mind. Also, if you stab psychic representations of your fears, Mozart will come talk to you.
We’ve previously explored some beloved children’s classics with timeless philosophy for grown-ups, plus some quirky coloring books for the eternal kid, and today’s we’re looking at the flipside — little-known children’s books by beloved authors of literature for grown-ups.
JAMES JOYCE
James Joyce may be best known as a poet, playwright, short story writer and novelist. But in an August 10, 1936 letter his grandson, Stephen, Joyce planted the story seeds of what became The Cat and the Devil — a charming children’s picture-book, originally illustrated by French cartoonist Roger Blachon, about the cat of Beaugency and a moral dilemma, a classic fable narrative mixing Irish wit with French folklore, shaken and stirred with Joyce’s extraordinary storytelling.
Joyce’s original letter to “Stevie” can be found in Stuart Gilbert’s 1964 volume,Letters of James Joyce. We Too Were Children has more images, a synopsis and a timeline of different editions.
“This is a picture of William Faulkner during his stint as a Hollywood screenwriter when he was penning To Have and Have Not for Howard Hawks. It’s Faulkner working at the Garden of Allah, the famous bungalow complex where F. Scott Fitzgerald used to live as well. It’s done with crayon on cardboard by Raf Green.”
(via vintageanchor)

Capote would supposedly write supine, with a glass of sherry in one hand and a pencil in another. In a 1957 Paris Review interview with Pati Hill, Capote explains: “I am a completely horizontal author. I can’t think unless I’m lying down, either in bed or stretched on a couch and with a cigarette and coffee handy. I’ve got to be puffing and sipping. As the afternoon wears on, I shift from coffee to mint tea to sherry to martinis. No, I don’t use a typewriter. Not in the beginning. I write my first version in longhand (pencil). Then I do a complete revision, also in longhand.”
Read about other famous authors on Flavorwire!
Do you have any weird writing habits?
Over at Wattpad we’ve been getting super excited for the release of the new YA series ‘Glow’ by Amy Kathleen Ryan. We’re really excited to share the story that started the series (Mobile Wattcode 1731426) on Wattpad before the release of Book 1 in September.

“I was born in Jackson, Wyoming, where I lived in an apartment above my father’s drywall business and paint store. As a kid I spent a lot of time outside, climbing trees and scrambling all over the hills that bordered our town. I always liked writing stories, but I didn’t become a serious reader until I discovered A Wrinkle in Time, by Madeleine L’Engle. I was totally hooked, read all of L’Engle’s books, and then moved on to writers like Susan Cooper, Isaac Asimov, and Jack London. I dreamed about being a writer, and I even wrote the beginnings of a first novel in the fifth grade. It was called The Adventures of Kim D. Lavenport, and to this day, my mother is convinced it is my best work. Soon, though, I put Kim in a drawer and forgot all about her. I developed other interests, especially in acting and science, two areas in which I excelled. For a while, writing took a back seat.

“Sigh. Authors just don’t insult each other like they used to. Sure, Martin Amis raised some eyebrows when he claimed he would need brain damage to write children’s books, and recent Pulitzer Prize winner Jennifer Egan made waves when she disparaged the work that someone had plagiarized, but those kinds of accidental, lukewarm zingers are nothing when compared to the sick burns of yore. It stands to reason, of course, that writers would be able to come up with some of the best insults around, given their natural affinity for a certain turn of phrase and all. And it also makes sense that the people they would choose to unleash their verbal battle-axes upon would be each other, since watching someone doing the same thing you’re doing — only badly — is one of the most frustrating feelings we know. So we forgive our dear authors for their spite. Plus, their insults are just so fun to read. Click through for our countdown of the thirty harshest author-on-author burns in history, and let us know if we’ve missed any of your favorites in the comments!”
Click here to read the list!
This week has seen strongly worded responses to changes at online eBook posting sites Scribd and Quizilla. As a result, Wattpad has received a flood of questions from new members looking for an alternative place to post their writing as well as existing authors who already use Wattpad to market their title and socialize with readers. Wattpad is primarily a space to grow readership, meet other authors, gain feedback on works in progress and create a fan base, as well as a platform to provide readers with a way to enjoy new and original fiction. Because Wattpad is a social hub and not an eBook commerce site, writers maintain complete control over their work and can share as much or as little of their work as they wish. In short, Wattpad does not charge any fees for people to read any of the content that has been shared on the site and mobile apps. Writers have full control over their fiction and poetry and may make it public or private to be shared only among readers permitted by the author and we will never remove a writer’s content from the site. Writers and readers have the option to participate in the Wattpad community as much or as little as they prefer. For social members, the option to opt into add-ons such as Twitter or Facebook exists, but Wattpad does not assume that a member’s preference is to make use of any feature on the site. With the growth in self-publishing, authors have taken on more responsibility in terms of promotion and upfront cost. The upshot of this is that authors have also been able to maintain more control over their work and how it is presented to readers. On Wattpad, authors own total rights to their work and can specify their own terms and conditions and remove or add to their work at any time. We hope this clarifies Wattpad’s role in the marketing and reading of eBooks and the concerns new Wattpad writers have asked us to clarify. We encourage you to email us at contact@wattpad.com with any questions you have.
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